The LHC currently produces 15 to 25 petabytes of data annually; the data are then processed by a combined total of 250,000 Intel Many Integrated Core (MIC) processor cores spread throughout the world. Intel MIC processors are built upon the popular Intel Xeon server processors, thus making it easy to port code from Xeon-optimized code. In addition, the LHC computers also simulate what physicists expect to happen when particle beams collide, which they can compare against the actual data to find new discoveries.

About six minutes into the interview, you'll see an example of the difference between single-core execution of a simulation and 32-core execution of one of the simulations used in the LHC. This shows the massive power of these MIC processors in powering the data analysis of the LHC.